Santa Clara University

Public Programs and Partnerships - 2001-2002 Symposia

Center for Science, Technology and Society

2001-2002 Symposia

 

  • Silicon Valley, Innovation, and the History of Modern Computing – Gordon Moore, Douglas Engelbart, and Regis McKenna, October 4, 2001

 

  • The Future of the Past – Thomas Hughes, Professor of the History and Sociology of Science, University of Pennsylvania, October 8, 2001

 

  • Industry Practices on Privacy – The People Factor and Technology – October 8, 2001

 

  • The Best of Times: America in the Clinton Years – Haynes Johnson, Author and journalist, October 23, 2001

 

  • The Sky is the Limit? – Challenges the Biotechnology Industry Faces in the Post-Genome Map Era – Panel discussion, October 25, 2001

 

  • Secrets of Silicon Valley – Alan Snitow and Deborah Kaufman, film producers, November 12, 2001

 

  • The Nobel: Visions of Our Century – KQED film screening, January 9, 2002

 

  • Edutopia: A New Vision of Teaching and Learning in the Digital Age – Milton Chen, Executive Director, The George Lucas Educational Foundation, January 28, 2002

 

  • The Internet at a Crossroads: The Next Stage of Innovation – Jim Bankoff, President, AOL Web Properties, February 11, 2002

 

  • Future Imperfect – David Friedman, Professor of Law, Santa Clara University, February 20, 2002

 

  • Beyond Napster: Online Music Communities and the Rise of the Digital Deadhead – John Ratliff, Assistant Professor of Sociology, February 25, 2002

 

  • Adam Smith and Charles Darwin: Reconciling Behavioral and Neoclassical Economics with Tools from Natural Science – Terry Burnham, Visiting Assistant Professor, Harvard University, March 4, 2002

 

  • The FDA: A Healthy Examination – The Civil Society Institute and the SCU Biotechnology Department, March 7, 2002

 

  • Willing to Die for JAVA: How Maverick Entrepreneurs Changed Technology – Michael S. Malone, Editor-at-large, Forbes ASAP, March 21, 2002

 

  • Altruistically Inclined? The Behavioral Sciences, Evolutionary Theory, and the Origins of Reciprocity – Alexander Field, Professor of Economics, Santa Clara University, April11, 2002

 

  • The Broadband Demography of California – Allen Hammond, Professor of Law, Santa Clara University, April 26, 2002

 

  • All in the Family? Human Reproductive Cloning and Intergenerational Ethics – Leilani Miller, Assistant Professor of Biology, Santa Clara University, April 29, 2002

 

  • Marketing 24/7: The Age of Total Access – Regis McKenna, Founder and Chairman of the McKenna Group, May 2, 2002

 

  • Ten Trends that Matter as the Boomers Age – Mary Furlong, Founder and Chairman of Third Age, Inc., May 6, 2002

 

  • IWT/VDC Community Based Projects – Institute for Women and Technology in the Virtual Development Center, May 7, 2002

 

  • Technology Benefiting Humanity Award Winner: Chaz Holder – Chaz Holder, President and BioMedical Engineer of CZBioMed, June 5, 2002